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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
By the Honorable Charles Francis Phillips of New York.
GENERAL BANKING SECTION
BUSINESS EDUCATION AND COMMERCIAL AND BANKING METHODS By Henry Clews of the banking house of Henry Clews an Company, New York.
How FOREIGN COMMERCE BENEFITS THE AMERICAN BANKER
By W. L. Moyer, President of the Mechanics' and Traders' Ban
of New York City.
BANKING CONDITIONS IN WALL STREET
By Thomas F. Woodlock, with S. N. Warren and Company, New
York.
THE RELATION of the BankING CAPITAL TO THE VOLUME OF BUSINES
By Professor Frank L. McVey of the University of Minnesota.
BANK CREDITS
By James G. Cannon, Vice-President of the Fourth National Banl
of New York.
BANK AUDITS
By Seymour Walton of the firm of Buchanan, Walton, Joblin and
DeVor, Chicago.
SECURITIES THAT ARE NOT
By J. T. Bradley, N.
First National Bank of
REQUISITES OF A GOOD LO
By E. T. Coman, Cas
Washington.
PAYMENT OF INTEREST BY D
By Frederick D. Kilburi
ment of the State of Ne
BANK DEFALCATIONS-THEIR CAUSES AND CURES
By Edward P. Moxey, Expert Bank Examiner for the United
States, Department of Justice.
⚫ NATIONAL BANK EXAMINATIONS
By Joseph Chapman, Jr., Cashier of the Northwestern National
Bank of Minneapolis.
WHERE WAS THE BANK EXAMINER?
By R. S. Flynn, President of the National Live Stock Bank of
Chicago.
SUPERVISION AND PUBLICITY
By. J. A. S. Pollard, Cashier of the Fort Madison Savings Bank,
Fort Madison, Ia.
ix
y Thomas B. Paton, Editor of the Banking Law Journal, New
y William S. Power, President of the William S. Power Com-
any, Pittsburg.
ADVERTISING
y Francis R. Morison, Auditor and Advertising Manager of the
Citizens' Savings and Trust Company, Cleveland, Ohio.
BANKING REFORM AND CURRENCY SECTION
ING THE DEPOSITS IN NATIONAL BANKS
by John Schuette, President of the Manitowoc Savings Bank, Mani-
Owoc, Wisconsin.
: PANACEAS
PAGE
121
141
y Andrew J. Frame, President of the Waukesha National Bank,
Waukesha, Wisconsin.
NCIAL CRISES
175
y Theodore E. Burton, Member of the House of Representatives.
OMIC WASTE OF OUR TREASURY SYSTEM
180
By Lyman J. Gage, ex-Secretary of the Treasury.
RAL BANK CURRENCY AND NATIONAL BANK CURRENCY
187
By William B. Dean of St. Paul, Minn., Member of the Indianapolis
Monetary Commission.
¡y A. B. Stickney, President of the Chicago Great Western Railway.
ABLE CHANGES IN THE BANKING LAW
y A. B. Hepburn, ex-Comptroller of the Currency and President
f the Chase National Bank of New York.
CH BANKING
238
y James B. Forgan, President of First National Bank of Chicago.
:H BANKING
254
y Horace White, former Editor of the New York Evening Post.
y Henry W. Yates, President of the Nebraska National Bank,
'maha.
282
y William A. Nash, President of the Corn Exchange Bank, New
ork.
CURRENCY
290
ENCY CIRCULATION
, Cornelius A. Pugsley, President of the Westchester County
ational Bank, Peekskill, New York.
▾ James B. Forgan, President of the First National Bank of
icago.
RESERVE NATIONAL BANK NOTES
William B. Ridgely, Comptroller of the Currency.
314
Sound Versus SOFT MONEY
By Andrew J. Frame, President of the Waukesha National Bank,
PROPOSED CHANGES IN OUR BANKING LAWS
326
344
By Charles G. Dawes, ex-Comptroller of the Currency and Presi-
dent of the Central Trust Company of Illinois, Chicago.
BANK NOTE EXPERIENCE OF Twenty Years-1882 TO 1902
359
By Horace White, former Editor of the New York Evening Post.
STRENGTH AND WEAKNESS OF AMERICAN FINANCE
373
381
401
405
By Ellis H. Roberts, ex-Treasurer of the United States.
THE BANK AND THE TREASURY-THE Two GREAT PILLARS SUPPORTING
OUR FINANCIAL SYSTEM
By Frederick A. Cleveland, Professor of Economics in the New York University School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance.
CURRENCY REFORM
By Leslie M. Shaw, Secretary of the Treasury.
By John L. Hamilton, ex-President of the American Bankers'
Association.
THE MONETARY SITUATION AND ITS REMEDIES
By Henry Clews of the banking house of Henry Clews and Com-
pany, New York.
PENDING FINANCIAL LEGISLATION
By Charles N. Fowler, Chairman of the Committee on Banking
and Currency in the House of Representatives.
REFORM OF THE CURRENCY SYSTEM
By James H. Eckles, ex-Comptroller of the Currency and President of the Commercial National Bank, Chicago.
INFLUENCE OF THE INCREASING GOLD SUPPLY UPON PRICES and the Rate
OF INTEREST
By Joseph French Johnson, Dean of the New York University
School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance.
By Frank A. Vanderlip, Vice-President of the National City Bank,
New York.
TRUST COMPANY SECTION
THE TRUST COMPANY AS A FACTOR IN THE FINANCES OF THE NATION
By Festus J. Wade, President of the Mercantile Trust Company,
St. Louis, Mo.
NATIONAL BANKS AND THE TRUST COMPANY PROBLEM
By Eugene E. Prussing of the law firm of Prussing, Brown and
King, Chicago.
TRUST COMPANY FAILURES
By A. A. Jackson, Vice-President of the Girard Trust Company,
Philadelphia.
BUSINESS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES ANALOGOUS TO THAT OF Trust Com-
PANIES IN THE UNITED STATES
INVESTIGATION AND AUDIT OF THE ACCOUNTS OF A TRUST COMPANY
By A. O. Kittredge, C. P. A., of New York.
TRUST COMPANY FORMS
By Arthur Heurtley, Secretary of the Northern Trust Company,
AN ELEMENT OF DANGER TO BANKS IN MUNICIPAL BONDS AS SECURITY 501
By Clark Williams, Vice-President of the Columbia Trust Company
THE DUTIES AND LIABILITIES OF TRUST COMPANIES ACTING AS TRANSFER
AGENTS AND REGISTRARS
By Henry J. Bowdoin of Baltimore, Md.
THE PROTECTION OF TRUST COMPANIES AS TRANSFER AGENTS AND
REGISTRARS
507
520
By Jordan J. Rollins of New York, Member of the New York Bar.
POWER OF FIDUCIARIES OUTSIDE OF THE STATE OF THEIR APPOINTMENT 537
By Frederick Vierling, Trust Officer of the Mississippi-Valley
Trust Company.
THE POWER OF ATTORNEY FROM EXECUTORS AND TRUSTEES, FROM THE
VIEWPOINT OF THE DEPOSITARY
By Jordan R. Rollins of New York, Member of the New York Bar.
DUTIES OF TRUSTEES OF FINANCIAL CORPORATIONS
By Willis S. Paine, ex-President of the Consolidated National
Bank of New York and former Superintendent of the New York State Banking Department.
ESSENTIALS REQUIRED BY TRUST COMPANIES TO BE PUT IN MORTGAGES
AND OTHER PAPERS
By Andrew Squire of Cleveland, Ohio, Member of the Ohio Bar.
THE PROPER CONSERVATIVE ATTITUDE OF TRUST COMPANIES TOWARD
CORPORATE ENTERPRISES
By J. E. Borne, President of the Colonial Trust Company, New
542
553
556
563
THE BENEFIT OF A REAL ESTATE DEPARTMENT TO A TRUST COMPANY 566
By L. A. Anderson, Vice-President of the Mercantile Trust Com-
pany, St. Louis, Missouri.
THE SAVING DEPARTMENT OF A TRUST COMPANY
571
By Thornton Cooke, Treasurer of the Fidelity Trust Company of
Kansas City, Missouri.
THE ADVANTAGE OF OPERATING SAFE-DEPOSIT VAULTS IN CONNECTION
WITH THE TRUST COMPANY
576
By William A. Carr, Secretary and Treasurer of the Union Safe-
Deposit Company of Pittsburg.
TRUST COMPANY ADVERTISING
580
By Richard L. Crampton, Assistant Cashier of the National Bank
of the Republic, Chicago.